A Nigerian IT consultant warns many government websites are not security-tested, raising risks of cyberattacks, data breaches, and online fraud.
An expert says many Nigeria government websites are not properly security-tested. That leaves public portals exposed to cyberattacks, data theft, and service downtime. The warning comes as cyber fraud rises and attackers get faster.
In an interview with Nairametrics, IT consultant Adedoyin Adedeji said most Nigerian government websites are not security-tested before they go live. Security testing means checking a site for weak points, like unlocked doors in a building, before criminals find them first.
Adedeji, who is also a Managing Partner at BlueRave Ltd, linked weak testing to a wider trend of cyber fraud and data breaches in Nigeria. A data breach is when private information, like names, phone numbers, or ID records, leaks or gets stolen.
He said organisations need to adopt stronger security measures and keep up with changing attack methods. That includes routine vulnerability assessments, which are periodic checks for known flaws, and faster incident response, which is how a team detects and contains an attack.
Government websites are often critical infrastructure. They host services like tax filings, company registration, identity-related requests, and public information portals. If attackers take them over, the impact can spread to citizens and businesses that rely on those systems.
For startups and fintechs that integrate with public systems, weak government cybersecurity also increases operational risk. An outage or compromise can break onboarding flows, verification steps, and payments that depend on government data.
The interview also lands in a period of tighter attention on cybersecurity compliance in Nigeria, including expectations around reporting incidents and protecting personal data. For teams building products in the Cybersecurity space, the gap suggests demand for audits, monitoring, and secure-by-design web development.
Nairametrics (May 1, 2026)
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